That first dude was absolutely awe-inspiring and I really didn’t see the comeback story happening there. I got sober in August 14, 2019. I relapsed recently and I’m struggling again but this dude just revitalized my jolt. I feel that same enthusiasm and electric energy for recovery. I also believe my life’s purpose is to help others be saved the way I was.
The second guy could've legit be narrating a BBC documentary about heroin and then at the end say "... so that's how I was dealing heroin" and blow everyone's mind watching.
@rouuAs a Brit, I can say there are quite a lot of people like this guy who are on the gear, Heroin isn't known as the gentleman's drug of choice for no reason. I thought the same thing to begin with, especially when he stated he would stay within the farming communities until they began to trust him, but he also said he was only usually there for a day or two ? That must be either a trusting bunch of opium farmers, or he has the ability to charm the birds down from the trees, hahaha. Although I believe he could be telling the truth, it sounds like he's done some hard core jail, and he's definitely had a lifelong addiction to the gear. Wonder if he ever met old chop chop while doing his ten in Pentridge ? Edit, I've just read up about him, he's legit.
@@fredzep01 A few days to 1 week ... given they're simple farmers often with families I guess, but not living in wealthy conditions with separate guest rooms, this made perfect sense to me. He'd stayed as long as he felt he wasn't disturbing their daily lives, then moved on to the next farmer in the same or next village, pretty much like "couch hopping", (or hammock hopping if you will), meaning he's still in and around the area for months ... the farmers are all pretty much neighbours or at least know each other to a certain degree depending on distance between their farms; if they wanted they could all come together without him and make up their minds about him. He eats, drinks, harvests, smokes, lives with them and if he can he helps them to drill a well or something ... imo he made himself very open and vulnerable by living with them for so long. Heck if I weren't nearly his age, I'd love to make that trip myself and learn about their methods from scratch. Edit: Who's "old chop chop", please?
You can tell the first gentleman is extremely smart and is very comfortable with speaking. No pauses, no um's - just clear and concise sentences. Would love to hear more stories from him. Edit: Whoa, thanks for all the likes. Also, all of you arguing about my comment... get a life lol
@@fungustheclown666nah the guy said he got his PhD after going back to school he isn't a medical doctor but still a doctor in whatever his degree was in
I had NO idea..... I clicked on this out of curiosity, and figured I would only last 5 minutes at most. I was transfixed. I've heard about all of this for decades, but have never actually seen it. Really enjoyed this.
Best drama ever and it seems all factual My only question is how come this guy is still alive - drug cartels and warlords like their retribution- an eye for an eye !!
@@TheAtticradio I was glued to the stories. I used to make Ecstasy back in college in the 70's. It was not illegal and I was the TA in the Chem Lab. I would go up at 2am and make a batch from Sudafed. It was easy back then. I sold them for twenty five dollars a piece. I only cut it with VitC and B complex. Mine was so pure it was glittering. It lasted a full from beginning to end about 16 hours. My husband and I did it like three times. (It is an Entire weekend affair) He and I were both in Medical School when the government changed the ratings and made it a Schedule 1 drug. We didn't look back. Our educations were more important. I knew they were real because when he said I can tell just by out it looks.... That is 100% true. I look at these drugs kids are doing and test for Fentanyl. Not every test has been negative.
The fact that we get such detailed and thoughtful insight into this otherwise completely obscured world is really amazing. This is the type of content that really makes the internet a better more impactful place, and I appreciate yall time and effort that went into this.
As an addict myself, actively from age 16 to 35, now being 40; this is by far the most accurate, best told, informational documentary on drug smuggling I have ever seen. I can say first hand that the meth, cocain, and heroin stories are as truthful as they come. It is wild to watch today vs. the years of my most active addictions. A HUGE thank you to all of those who took the time and had the courage to make this film. You have no idea how truly inspirational you will be. I pray this video reaches 10 million or more.
Addict here too friend. Oxy got me a good 13 years ago. the 80's up the schnoz made me feel literally like Jesus. I couldn't believe that there was something that made me happier than coke - but high octane Oxy was it. I've been on methadone now for nearly 13 or 14 years....at 49 I figure it'll be with me forever. Methadone felt AMAZING at first!!! Then it just became like all other opiates - just use it to maintain being well. I also take Temazepam (up the schnoz too) and I love it! A Temazepam coupled with a 109 mg dose of methadone turns a mundane day into a lovely one.
@@wangson Why aren’t you getting off of Methadone? That sounds ridiculous to stay on it for as long as you have, much less say you plan to stay on it permanently for the rest of your life!
it's fascinating to me that all of the former dealers said that to actually help addicts and stop people getting into drugs what needs to happen is legalizing drugs and doing harm reduction rather than harsher prison sentences and more severe punishments. plus the description of the business side of things and how police activity affects the market and work... it really shows how the war on drugs gave the drug industry so much power.
Of course the dealers want to legalize drugs. In reality they're lying or forgetting why they were criminalized in the first place. In an ideal world everything would be legalized but some people can't handle themselves and legalization has always been shown to greatly increase usage. Eventually people will whine and moan there would be such an an uproar drugs would have to be restricted again and we'd be back to square one. As for 'winning' the drug war thats such a non sequitur. Nobody/few people on the other side claims they will win the war on drugs. Its an ongoing process. Its like saying oh we'll never win the war against murder. Might as well legalize it.
@@MrMikeDao Oregon forgot about the harm reduction part of it. But they did provide a nice object lesson in that it isn't as simple as just "legalize it", there have to be some other social systems in place to keep from just creating yet another disaster.
Look up the 2021-2022 prison riots in Ecuadorian prisons, idk how he survived, I have a friend locked up over there and I haven't heard of him in asome time 😢
ecuador's prisons are some of the most ruthless plots of land/buildings on the planet. it's not even anything to joke about it's really that bad. pure chaos a lot of the time. like the previous dude said, look up the riots from during COVID - they're absolutely insane.
Just go online to a gore site an see videos of Ecuador prisons .......murders.....rapes .decapitations shits crazy how he survived as a foreigner is beyond me
The first guy is absolutely bang on about addiction. The idea of abstinence is absurd. You do NOT have to be ready to quit forever to start moving forward and getting to a place where you do want to quit. When you're in active addiction, thats your life. When you quit, you try to abstain forever, you sit facing your empty life with the weight on your shoulders and then the relapse comes, with shame and self hatred by the bucket load. We need to be encouraging and showing people how they can start building lives first, before they even think about the quitting process. We need to be giving people lives that they *want* to live, not throwing them sober and sore back into the life they run from.
@@FIshfood500 Current models of therapy don't actually exist right now to be able to accurately tell you officially how it would be done. These are my own ideas, from my life, research, and experiences. Imo we should be giving therapy first, while the person is using, same for support groups, same for Occupational therapy, classes, any sort of skill building activity. We should be giving financial skill classes, we should be helping people understand themselves, all of this long before we even think about quitting. Once a person has seen another side to life, that isn't all pain, sadness, trauma, once we teach them a few new skills, maybe help them get into routines where they are able to just for a second, see, that life *can* be alright, there's a far higher chance that they'll actually want to stay sober once they do physically quit. No one becomes an addict for no reason, and we have a plethora of subtypes of addicted person, from high functioning to people who live on the streets. What they share in common is how they cope with pain. If we can somehow start to soothe that pain, before we drag a person off a substance+throw them into cold hard reality, I feel they'd have a better chance. Before I got sober, I started making different decisions about my life. I picked up some old hobbies, started painting some stuff, started writing a lot. Doing those things then gave me this outlet for everything I've ever felt, all the things I used substances to numb. Even on substances, engaging in that expression led to huge positives for me and Ik others who have experienced the same things. After a while of building this little bit of happiness, I felt less and less like I *needed* substances. I've never went to rehab, never done official 12 steps, I just studied psych for a long time and thus studied a lot of models involving addiction. For me the current models focus far too much on addiction as if addiction is the root of the issue. When in reality addiction is actually the secondary behaviour that a person uses to cope with a root cause, whatever that may be. For some it's trauma, pain, overwhelm, self hatred, depression, for some it's due to neurodivergency, and a need to feel control and not feel so overwhelmed, truly there are a plethora of reasons *why* someone ends up addicted to something or things, and we need to be focusing more on that. The addicted persons whole life, rather than just that addictive behaviour.
@@FIshfood500exactly , they can’t answer that because all your money gets justified in going back to drug use , if it was easy to live normal lives while getting high like you want to as an addict everyone would do it
@@JoeRogansForehead I had typed out a reply proposing my own model of treatment regarding addiction but it's not here. I'm going to type one out now, and reply to the fellow who asked! Ps, I have no interest in money, the last thing I want is to let the system use vulnerable people to make dirty money. I'm aware of the American rehab system and it's vast flaws, but I'm from the U.K, former psychology student and substance abuser. I have no benefit here, I have no personal gain, I literally just make observations and make proposals for change BC I want to.
David McMillan is legit. One of the only people to escape from Bangkok Hilton prison. He has done many interviews with Shaun Atwood. Extremely interesting man.
Stay ignorant and stay away from street drugs. If it's not prescribed by a doctor and picked at a pharmacy or Pot grown by someone you know and trust always assume it has Fentanyl in it. Even the Pot from these sticker shops here in Upstate NY has tested positive for Fentanyl. I know personally someone who lost their husband to an OD from smoking a joint from an Ounce of Pot bought at a retail location.
after all that work and taking down an entire crew of over 90 people the undercover cop is told that ' we have crushed the drug trade for at least 2 hours "......sums it all up ....the war on drugs is futile
@@DerMaus Singapore, being a small country, has never had a problem on the scale "the war on drugs" refers to. Additionally, it still arrests a sizeable amount of people each year for using hard drugs. Far more than for weed, too
@@terralexj9468 sure but we heard it in the video directly. The traffickers don't want to mess with places that have harsh sentences. We can't replicate their full success but if you clamp down hard enough you can deter much of it.
@@DerMaus Singapore has changed a lot over the years, they have strict laws and enforce them. They cannot maintain their reputation and income status if it is allowed.
First guy really made me tear up. Recently cleaned up and got out of the life… and I’ve been so scared to find a new passion in life. But I really think I’m ready. Thank you dude. Getting a copy of your book right now.
It's incredibly impactful to see the undercover cop's deep regret in realising that his incredible achievement and sacrifice had amounted to virtually nothing.
Plus, destroyed countless lives, removed parents and breadwinners from families, ruined childhoods, and padded the pockets of politicians and the Prison Industrial Complex.
That will always be the case. Some things can be kept off the streets to some degree, others are simply too popular. If a certain percentage of a population don't want to abide by prohibition, there is virtually nothing that can be done. No-matter how many is put in prison, there will always be someone willing to take over. Prohibition is doomed to fail. It just creates revenue streams for organized crime. The harder it is pushed, the more brutal the type of gangster that will step up. But there will always be someone.
All the money that we spend on law enforcement interdiction efforts and crop eradication.. mostly could've went to fund treatment for those who want it. And all the money spent on drugs, could've been taxed and went to schools and infrastructure.
With the first guy, I have a friend who was arrested with a trunk full of cocaine. He turned his life around after prison and just became a licensed social worker last week. So proud of that guy!
@@peggedyourdad9560especially in small markets the little guy is fucked. A monopoly is an inherent bad thing. That's why you have anti trust laws. But every company dreams of being the monopoly. So you can expect it to be a worse problem in an illegal unregulated market.
As an ex heroin addict, everything the second guy said is 100% true- including the fact that most overdoses attributed to heroin occur when alcohol and benzos are on board, not heroin alone.
@@georgewashington2930speedball thing is really an 80s myth. What would kill you is the downer which you take more of because you can't feel it as much due to the upper
@Dismem I over dosed on a speed ball 6 months ago in Chicago. Its not a myth. When the coke wears off people OD, people do more dope to come down from the coke. When I OD'd I put .1 of good powder a $10 bag of H or whatever it is these days. From west side chicago. I snorted all of it at once, I felt amazing. When the coke wore off I overdosed on the green line train. Woke up at the hospital and still had 6 bags of dope in my pocket. I then woke up in some pissed of guys yard like 6 miles away in Humboldt park.. ive got 3 and a half months clean now.
@@Atrainswrld I hope you stay clean. Just remember when you have urges to go back to the mindset of getting through that minute, and then that hour, and then that day at a time. Urges will come during stressful periods in life, so it’s really important to remember that “this feeling will soon pass.”
@@Atrainswrld exactly you Od'd.. The speedball myth was "uppers and downers send your heart faster and slower at the same time causing death.. Totally wrong.
@@RebornLegacy because it waits until something happens in your life, where you may get tempted and go back to using...... it is very common for people to be clean for 10-20 years, and then something tragic happens in their life, for example a brother, sister, mother or father passing, and they go back to using drugs..... there is also a good saying that goes "you are never an EX drug addict" "you are just a drug addict that does not use drugs any more"
What the world can't seem to wrap their head around is that some people require drugs for their entire lives, and full grown adults don't need to be told what drugs they require nor what their doses need to be, especially full grown adults who have been doing drugs their entire lives. Some of us are just never going to stop and you can't make us and you shouldn't try. Not all of us are drug addicts either, some of us have genetic conditions that make it so we are dependent on drugs and dependency is different than addiction.
People say that UA-cam is a pointless cesspit, but these How To tutorials could be a godsend for impoverished but ambitious people trying to get into the industry. Nicely done.
This is bloody good. Like all the comments mention, “thought it’d be something I’d come back too over multiple sittings”, “clicked on it from sheer curiosity not thinking I’d stay” etc. but it is so interesting you’re forced to see it through. Encapsulates your focus easily and you’re stuck wanting more from each individual even though everything is eloquently and thoroughly explained. Wow this was heckin awesome
As someone who suffers with extreme severe anxiety I can totally relate to her. I would stop eating for days at a time as a punishment. I worry a lot about my life, everyone around me and pleasing everyone. It's absolutely crippling, so glad she got the help she needed, lovely young lady it's so sad that society has 1 in 3 people suffering mental health issues. I hope everyone seeks help
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about how mushrooms and psychedelics treats anxiety, but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
Yes, doctor Greg mushroom I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
13:45, ... I am a recovering addict with a grateful18 yrs. clean from heroin, ... What this man is saying with this statement is bang on the money. We will NEVER win a war on drugs, ... NEVER!! You have to stop or at the least minimize demand for the drugs in the first place. People use drugs because they want to feel differently than they do now. And most of the depression in our society comes from not having enough money to pay our bills. 50 percent of North American's can't afford a $500.00 emergency. Start paying people a living wage and you will see the biggest change for the good in 3-4 generations.
I can see the addiction to the life as well as the drugs. The money and that powerful feeling that you have people and resources at your fingertips must feel amazing at times. But you also know how dangerous it is, and often want to leave because you know it wont last forever. Theres no “happily ever after” or easy retirement for someone who deals. Very scary. Very informative.
OMG! I’ve had an education today. I thought at almost 71 I was aware. Governments who keep people trapped in poverty and on low earnings must accept some responsibility for this. When people are desperate to get out of poverty they become easy targets for drug gangs. I can’t see an end to this trade. It’s an easy yet dangerous way to make money.
Yes and no….I don’t think you can ever say poverty is an excuse for crime, especially when it is “first world poverty” where the poor are more likely to be overweight and they have a room, a bath, just not in a nicer neighborhood etc….compared to third world poverty, where people starve or live in trash or mud shanties with no indoor plumbing, etc. And at least on the US or other first-world democracies, you can almost live for free. FB marketplace is packed with nice items, and many buy something, set the box aside so it stays nice, use the item, then pass it along for free when done….I do this every week. Thrift stores and garages sales are packed with great clothes (have to search thru a lot, but they are there) for pennies on the dollars, and many live in vans with a gym member for a year, then an apartment a year, to save up money….it’s not bad in your 20-30s. And ways to save on food, etc. without going to extremes. And colleges and med schools have scholarships just waiting for good kids from a poor background. It is not easy, but there are way more options than “well….guess I need to deal drugs” if poor. My grand parents were dirt poor farmers and coal miners, but they saw that their kids got a good middle class career, and then they helped their kids go to med school, etc.
@@Itried20takennames If you have never experienced the pain of hunger and abject poverty. Then it’s is very easy to judge. Life on benefits is not as great as some imagine. I am disgusted in this day and age that this entitled government would punish those down on their luck by imposing sanctions on them. This is the cruelest system ever implemented and has pushed many to suicide.Forcing mothers out to work is another thing I am against. Children need the security of someone being there for them when they come home from school.
He was actually on the mdma guys podcast. There's hours of the two talking, and yeah heroin guy is captivating. Pretty sure they ended up doing several episodes, the guy just had that many stories to tell and was so good at telling them.
The first dude was such an incredible speaker! Very educated & empathetic. I really took a lot from it all, ty for speaking out about it! Stay strong & keep fighting/speaking! I'd love to see him speak!
The ecology makes perfect sense. When the cop explains that eliminating any given gang increases the monopoly and power of the rival gangs, it’s “natural selection” - the “fittest” gangs survive and dominate. So in a way, policing eliminates the weaker gangs.
The older guy is extremely wise, blunt, and speaks in a matter of fact way that’s enjoyable. Dude just knows what he’s talking about and it’s clear he has so much experience. Unfortunately I know the opiate/opioid life too well.
David McMillan is such a triple OG in the smack game bro that he said he used to hide it in the "wooden surrounds of radio amplifiers" lol. I haven't heard that term since I was a child in early 90's lol. Also, I too suffer from opiate use disorder.
@@Naughtforeye lol ya that’s pretty old school. Sorry to hear that man, keep fighting the good fight. Stay alive, that’s the #1 thing. Especially these days with all of the nasty sht going around.
Today he's a gently old man. Remember, at least two people have died due to his actions, that we know of. His participation in the heroine trade has ruined countless lives. He belongs in the Bangkok Hilton. He's earned his stay, but runs free like dealer #1. There's something wrong with this picture.
Mr McMillan served ten years in Pentridge - six months for the importation of heroin, and 9 1/2 years for that short collar and cardigan combo at 28:19 . These stories are (and this is a bad word for it), intoxicating. Thank you.
This is the kind of dealer interview the world needs. Dude concisely describes all issues that have evolved from the American war on drugs. What an intelligent man
Exactly we ruined an entire generation of mostly guys due to the war on drugs. We all know someone suffering from addiction. They deserve a chance at life
YEP, war on drugs is all about $$, gov LOVES taking all the cash and resources the drug dealers have. Its a massive source of funding for black projects. Friends DEA, has been for 12 years. He says men in suits hit up their evidence rooms, take all the cash and any valuables they feel like.
And usually the ones lobbying for more restrictions are the ones with the best product to sell Hey, higher risk means higher price, but it's not a "risk" for them since they have the cops in their pockets. Anyone who's shilling for more severe drug laws is suspect.
Not really, it's less volume being sold to the end users. Whether the profit remains the same depends on how much the price goes up and how much the volume goes down.
I really like David McMillan. He's softly spoken and really knows what he's talking about. He's intelligent, worldly. Not the usual drug dealer we get shown via a documentary.
Is he the guy who escaped from Bang Kwang? That is the “Bangkok Hilton”, the prison in Bangkok, Thailand. He is from Australia, and actually the only (foreigner)to ever escape from there. Yes, very intelligent guy, but also very arrogant, according to his former prison friends. In any case, it would be interesting to spend an evening with this guy 😮
@@scandicdream Wait didn't a diplomats daughter escape from the woman's section of the Bangkok Hilton aswell ? ( escape I mean pay her way out ) One thing I learnt living in South East Asia is always pay the first policeman that catches you with anything ! As the further up you go the more expensive it gets So if you can't afford the Bribe start calling anyone who can Never involve your home country's diplomats as this will take money off the table 😢
@@NameName-do9hj I don’t know about that. You are talking about “Lard Yao”, the woman’s prison. I have not heard of that. Yes, you are correct, ALWAYS pay as quickly as you can, not only does it get more expensive, eventually it could get to late…I.e. if you have come all the way to the local jail, and your info is taken down officially, you are basically frugged….. I know this because I have lived in south east Asia half my life…but, so, yes you 100% correct, my friend
During my teenage years and early twenties, the part about having hundreds of thousands of drugs in your closet really resonated with me. That period of my life feels close, but now I'm clean and no longer involved in drug dealing. Fast money, also known as easy money, disappears as quickly as it comes, but now I value hard-earned money and strive to hold onto it. It's been two years since I've been clean, and my drug of choice was opiates. I'm grateful that phase of my life is behind me, although every day is still a struggle. I owe thanks to my wife of 10 years and my mother for their unwavering support. Seriously, kids, steer clear of hard drugs - it's no joke. Good luck 🍀 everyone 🇨🇦
Come on, man...really? 'hundreds of thousands of drugs in your closet' resonated with you? Do you expect people browsing UA-cam comments to believe you were some sort of kingpin with a huge stockpile of drugs/money? It's not at all out of the realm of possibility that you had an opiod addiction and found a way to recovery, but dude....
@@m.streicher8286 Tell that to the guy I replied to. He's the one that felt obligated to include 'having hundreds of thousands of drugs in your closet' "resonating" with him and then proceeded to comment about he's no longer involved in "drug dealing".
Meanwhile the most legendary, interesting and intelligent people in the world are being oppressed by the likes of UA-cam so you don't ever get to discover them and of course, same thing for the mainstream media.
Good job blurring out the drugs. Seeing white powder definitely would have harmed me, and I'm so happy and grateful that you protected me from that fate.
First dude is truly the goat, and his acknowledgement of the privilege he was afforded through his perceived identity was both extremely touching and very intellectually sound in a way we dont see much anymore on youtube
@Skritza Not much different than the doctors prescribing 1000s pounds of amphetamines today. Funny how one is completely acceptable but the other so stigmatized.
I live in Philadelphia which is the epicenter of the opioid epidemic in the US and I can tell you that they go after the users not the dealers or the suppliers. They're going after the wrong people. They're vilifying the homeless that are victims of the drug epidemic
To understand the U.S. war on drugs. You must first understand that it has been an outstanding success, greater than anything ever imagined. For those who stand to profit from it. It’s not about eliminating illegal drugs or their use. It’s about the money that can be made.
@user-bm8ls6vt1v I’ve often said the U.S. economy could not withstand stopping illegal drug use. If all illegal drugs vanished tomorrow it would set the economy into so much chaos and crash the economy like never before seen.
Addiction is such an issue and many often have co-existing mental health issues. Unless we resolve that we don't resolve the problem. A lot of forms of addiction in my life. We even joke about those who shop too much or whatever, it is the same problem different form. This was very good.
Yup. I loved downers. Realized my mind would move at a 1000 miles and hour and everything I did was done as efficient and quick as possible. Like in school I was A+ student, was in AP and honors all throughout high school got a 32 on my ACT, full ride scholarship and finished my degree in business in 3 years instead of 4. Soon as I was out of school I hit a rut. Had time. Too much time to myself and had broken a leg gotten Oxys and instantly knew this was what I was missing in my life. 3 years later I’m doing fentanyl and just now finding out I’ve terrible anxiety. 2 years clean now! 24 years old and running my families trucking school business now. Super thankful for my meds fr. Without my Zoloft I don’t think I could function truly without having some type of downer slowing my mind.
Really fascinating. These guys are all smart and articulate. They make it clear that the war on drugs is not only futile but also makes everything worse.
Very proud of you and that's very normal. Good for you for knowing when you feel triggered and stay strong. I used heroin, every opiate and crack. It's been years and I still find myself remembering and craving that feeling.. just once more. It goes away now though. I don't have to play it all the way through. Keep going!
Today he's a gently old man. Remember, at least two people have died due to his actions, that we know of. His participation in the heroine trade has ruined countless lives. He belongs in the Bangkok Hilton. He's earned his stay, but runs free like dealer #1. There's something wrong with this picture.
@@fallujah0351 My pot dealer back in the day was actually one of the nicest people I knew 🤷 Even so, it seems the guy in this is reformed and back on the straight and narrow
He has some interesting point, although the second interviewee understands drugs and war on them better. Legalization of all drugs with certain oversight he suggested is probably the best solution, if law enforcement wasn't involved in drug trafficking in some ways like making jobs to fight what will never be defeated this way.
Yep, that's why you should be wary of anyone advocating for "harder drug laws" because it serves the supplier, not them. They can jack up the prices, thus increasing the desperation of the user and causing MORE crime. @@Chungalhunga
I used to tell my kids stay away from anything addictive, period. That was not enough for my youngest one. She had the most going for her, and she lost it all. Sad.
The only way to tackle inherent addiction from a young age is understand which exact reasons one has to feel the need to numb themselves. Everybody is an addict for something (dopamine, sugar), but real addicts lean towards substances that take them away from the present moment. Also, it's never too late to bring them back so don't give up
It really is true that the “not even once” attitude is the only way for hard drugs. Once you’ve tried it, the feeling sticks in your mind forever and it takes a very strong will to stay away. When you can snort motivation and inject pure peaceful bliss, it’s very hard to tell yourself that those things are evil.
I think my father had an excellent approach, he told me that if I was gonna do drugs do drugs but understand that they have these effects and make sure you always have someone safe around incase something goes wrong. And he wouldn't judge me if I did end up there. I never ended up trying g hard drugs despite having easy access and curiosity.
Why is it that the people who have the most potential are also the most likely to get pulled into a vortex of death and despair? I am sorry for your loss. I had a friend who lost his aunt recently. His aunt had an incredible essence, star quality and so so loved by her family. The word that comes to my mind is Super Nova…💥
Brilliant! And the proof is, I was going to add it to "Watch later", however the moment I started the video I couldn't stop, Superb! More like this please.
The first dude is speaking a high level of truth. There's more powerful truths than others and very rarely you hear it at this level which almost exclusively involves first hand experience. People should pay close attention.
Psychedelics saved me from years of uncontrollable depression, anxiety, smoking, and illicit pills addiction. Imagine carving heavy chains for over a decade and then all of a sudden that burden is gone. Believe it or not, in a couple of years they'll be all over for treatment of mental health related issues.
Psilocybin is legal in some states and mushroom therapy is allowed in many states as a legitimate medical treatment. So I believe soon it'll be globally used as a treatment for anxiety, depression, and more.
To be honest, mushrooms are one of the most amazing things on the planet and it is natural, they serve in many ways not only for mental related issues.
Can you help me with a reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. It is very hard to get a reliable source here in New Zealand. Really need!
Yes, Sporeville. I had the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and addiction... Mushrooms definitely made a huge difference to why I'm clean today.
I wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He's 59 & has many mental health issues plus probably CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone. He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD knows if it is common for an obsession with violence.
This is so incredibly interesting, and it’s nice to see honest interviews with people that have turned their lives around. I can’t stand the film reel noises omg 😅
Extremely well done. Absolutely worth staying up until 4 AM to watch. Looking very forward to becoming acquainted with each of these men’s important work. 😅
I was raised in a meth lab/trailer. Honestly, I have lots of internal problems due to the chemicals. I've never consumed a drug. I was just unfortunate in my upbringing, and I suffer from those consequences.
If the Lord didn't help when they were a baby or a toddler or a small child or an older child or a teenager why the feck should anybody care what the Lord thinks now?
@vetinaris1297 I don't care what anyone thinks. It was a prayer. Of course, there needs to be action. Laws changed, the public educated, more help for victims.
I’m sorry that happened to you. If we’re to believe people’s opinions of the first speaker and how he’s inspiring and not just a scumbag meth-dealer, maybe Adi can help with some of his ill-gotten gains that he never had to do any true penance for now that he’s a “doctor”
“Because I’ve been around Cocaine so much that without even taking it, I can rub it between my fingers, look at the colour, *smell it,* and I can tell you pretty much which country it’s from”… 🤣🤣🤣
@@KarstRatsThe cocaine we used in the 80s was out of this world. I don’t regret using it at all-it’s almost a privilege, in hindsight-except it helped desensitize me to other drugs.
Becoming an adult (21) my eye has been opened up to how many people do drugs, mainly cocaine. Most adults/late teens, I’ve met have done coke at least once which has made me so interested in the world of dealing and just wanting to understand why it’s so easy to get. This was so fascinating to watch
This is amazing, it reminds of a Vice piece. Well done! I lost my best friend to hard drugs a couple years ago, I never got into that world me and him would just smoke weed and he'd come over messed up on H or whatever he felt like doing at that period of time decades ago. Really miss playing games with him and it sucks that he died so someone with a fat wad of cash could have a fatter wad of cash and it's devastated his family. It's a sad story that many other Americans have been through which is a huge concern. No stigma against anyone struggling with any of this stuff, just try to be safe and quit if you can cause I'm sure there are people who care about you.
Very interesting but as someone who has & is still an active heroin addict it really hurts deep down in my soul. From 17 to 55 and still struggling, that’s my whole life so I should probably not be put in the same room with this guy especially since I’m from the very place in Australia he was talking about. Peace and health to everyone still suffering ❤
Please use 0.22ug micron wheel filters and look up volumetric dosing on psychonaut wiki. It will literally keep you alive. I'm 5+ years "sober" now, but the goal should be to minimize physical harm and reduce the chance of overdose to nearly 0.
He didn't make it and if it wasn't him smuggling it'll be someone else and there are loads. They don't force it in the people who take it. I'm struggling but from prescription, it's just as bad.
@@kayleighkyme4666 +1, except I dropped the stigma completely. No need to worry as life is too short, I have chronic pain, I have oxy, yeah I take it, have been for well over 5 years. Can't really stop as I've had 6 surgeries and have tried every "alternative" under the sun, they just decided to keep me on oxy, wasn't lack of trying from my side, but sometimes, you move on, no matter what.
i came from an amazing child hood, spoiled only child. was unmotivated and didn’t go to college then met the wrong person and boom i was on ice. my struggle was two years heavy use but i’m 24 now and have a corporate job living the dream 2 years sober. i promise the only person who can help you is yourself. i’ve had bumps in the road but keep trying and trying
Legalising drugs and using money from taxation of drugs to deal with issues makes a lot more sense than pretending that law enforcement has a chance at suppressing it.
@@DougRoles-t2u If society takes your approach, they'll win the stupidest prize of all - even more addicts with ZERO treatment options, instead of at least some, running around being agents of chaos that they already are today. No one wins in that scenario, no one. You're free to be "holier-than-thou" and make moralistic judgements of people that are not in full possession of their faculties but addicts don't set out to take drugs thinking "oh, the government will foot the bill for my rehab so it's ok!". Any taxes from legalization would come from the addicts themselves and dealers - a net-new tax stream. If anything, ALL those taxes should be geared towards treatment because right now, the govt is diverting other tax money to fund treatment options. Absolutists with "simple solutions" (like yours) to very complex problems are the reason why we have a "war" on drugs and why they are illegal to begin with. Most absolutists on this topic never experienced significant socioeconomic, psychological, circumstantial strife that could push someone to use drugs and yet, somehow, think they're the best authority on how manage the problem. They are ones standing at the podiums of our society, sermonizing everyone on the "right" solution without a shred of empathy. Even the COP in the video took the time to understand, with empathy, the real victims of the structure he was trying to infiltrate - the USER-dealer.
Nobody ever said "Prohibition in the 20's was successful." Rather, Prohibition was the cause of the greatest crime wave in history. Annual deaths from all illegal drug overdose in US is a little over 100,000 on average. Annual deaths from cigarettes are about 500,000 on average. The War on Drugs keeps prices higher in illicit drug markets. The War on Drugs employs millions of law enforcement, lawyers, judges, counselors, etc. The War on Drugs causes drug related violence driven by territorial control for profits. We will NEVER NEVER NEVER make drugs legal. THERE'S TOO MUCH MONEY IN IT.
@@sarahferguson-i8ha founding physician of Johns Hopkins was a morphine/opiate addict -William Stewart Halsted. He basically said IF YOU HAVE the means, you can be on opioids for life. And it’s true. If you never have to worry about running out, police, and take care of your health. You can. But that’s not really realistic 😂
The way the first man recognized and acknowledged his privilege made me respect him so much more. Thanks for your story it was inspiring to know how you completely changed your life
started doing drugs since my teenage. Got addicted to heroin for over 16 years. Heroin addiction actually destroyed my life. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my mom recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
Amen God bless people. Save your health save your mind. Life is better without heroin, cocaine, alcohol and cigarettes. And you have more money in your pocket. God bless everyone who has rejected the devils intentions to be addicted to alcohol and cigarettes etc which can cause so much damage to health.
Can you help me with the reliable source A. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in France. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.@@SuvariBoorish-yh3rj
I'm really happy for you that your mom decided to help you...I hear about alot of family members or so called friends shutting an addict out of their life, which since most addicts do it to mask emotions to me is the worse thing someone can do to an addict.@@SuvariBoorish-yh3rj
@@BrieflyCarmel-vw1znI wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone. He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence. How can I get contact with him? Is he on insta??
@@FranklinDiverse-lm6mjYes he's Dr.jeffshroom. Shrooms to me is a natrual healer. I know a guy who has used mushrooms in the same way and they have really helped him. mah dudes have safe trips all.
Psilocybin mushrooms healed me . I can't explain it but my experience has been spiritual and eye opening . I also started micro dosing . It really helped me get rid of depression and anxiety . 0:03
That first dude was absolutely awe-inspiring and I really didn’t see the comeback story happening there. I got sober in August 14, 2019. I relapsed recently and I’m struggling again but this dude just revitalized my jolt. I feel that same enthusiasm and electric energy for recovery. I also believe my life’s purpose is to help others be saved the way I was.
Congratulations this April will be 2 years for me off opiates ❤🍀🇨🇦
That's awesome brother. Hope life is treating you well, sending you my best, truly.
Good luck. On your journey..
I was going to say the same thing. 5 years sober from opiates. My life is significantly better. His story is touching.
I believe in you Randall. You got it in you to kick it for good. Believe in yourself. Stay strong, you are not alone, you got this
Perhaps the best straight on no bullshit documentary on drug smuggling ever. No "moral pose" struck. Excellent.
The cop at the end was a nice touch.
That said, something of the "manual" of sorts, no?
@@MadScientist267 I think that's a fair statement.
@@MadScientist267 Knowing what didn't work only counts so far.
Good point
31:54 what is he talking about when he says “legal heroin?!?”
The second guy could've legit be narrating a BBC documentary about heroin and then at the end say "... so that's how I was dealing heroin" and blow everyone's mind watching.
😂
God that would be the best documentary ever. A documentary...with a TWIST!
I think it's a good piece but it does feel kinda scripted. It's too perfect.
@rouuAs a Brit, I can say there are quite a lot of people like this guy who are on the gear,
Heroin isn't known as the gentleman's drug of choice for no reason.
I thought the same thing to begin with, especially when he stated he would stay within the farming communities until they began to trust him, but he also said he was only usually there for a day or two ?
That must be either a trusting bunch of opium farmers, or he has the ability to charm the birds down from the trees, hahaha.
Although I believe he could be telling the truth, it sounds like he's done some hard core jail, and he's definitely had a lifelong addiction to the gear. Wonder if he ever met old chop chop while doing his ten in Pentridge ?
Edit, I've just read up about him, he's legit.
@@fredzep01
A few days to 1 week ... given they're simple farmers often with families I guess, but not living in wealthy conditions with separate guest rooms, this made perfect sense to me.
He'd stayed as long as he felt he wasn't disturbing their daily lives, then moved on to the next farmer in the same or next village, pretty much like "couch hopping", (or hammock hopping if you will), meaning he's still in and around the area for months ... the farmers are all pretty much neighbours or at least know each other to a certain degree depending on distance between their farms; if they wanted they could all come together without him and make up their minds about him.
He eats, drinks, harvests, smokes, lives with them and if he can he helps them to drill a well or something ... imo he made himself very open and vulnerable by living with them for so long.
Heck if I weren't nearly his age, I'd love to make that trip myself and learn about their methods from scratch.
Edit:
Who's "old chop chop", please?
You can tell the first gentleman is extremely smart and is very comfortable with speaking. No pauses, no um's - just clear and concise sentences. Would love to hear more stories from him.
Edit: Whoa, thanks for all the likes. Also, all of you arguing about my comment... get a life lol
I could listen to him for a while
Bloody shame he's a zionist
He's a piece of garbage that ruined countless lives
Some of this is editing. You can't actually be sure the camera cuts are continuous
he uses um about 20 times
The first guy is like the opposite of Walter he started dealing drugs and ended up a scholar and a teacher lol
I think he was a doctor first and then became a meth dealer. He probably lost his license to practice.
@@fungustheclown666nah the guy said he got his PhD after going back to school he isn't a medical doctor but still a doctor in whatever his degree was in
Breaking Good
PhD is impressive tho.
@@josephs_parent_or_guardian that is tight
I had NO idea.....
I clicked on this out of curiosity, and figured I would only last 5 minutes at most.
I was transfixed. I've heard about all of this for decades, but have never actually seen it.
Really enjoyed this.
The heroin dealer's demeanor and voice were pleasantly hypnotic, well played...
Same here.
This looks like such a bot comment no?
Best drama ever and it seems all factual
My only question is how come this guy is still alive - drug cartels and warlords like their retribution- an eye for an eye !!
@@TheAtticradio I was glued to the stories.
I used to make Ecstasy back in college in the 70's.
It was not illegal and I was the TA in the Chem Lab.
I would go up at 2am and make a batch from Sudafed.
It was easy back then. I sold them for twenty five dollars a piece.
I only cut it with VitC and B complex. Mine was so pure it was glittering. It lasted a full from beginning to end about 16 hours.
My husband and I did it like three times. (It is an Entire weekend affair)
He and I were both in Medical School when the government changed the ratings and made it a Schedule 1 drug. We didn't look back. Our educations were more important.
I knew they were real because when he said I can tell just by out it looks....
That is 100% true. I look at these drugs kids are doing and test for Fentanyl.
Not every test has been negative.
The fact that we get such detailed and thoughtful insight into this otherwise completely obscured world is really amazing. This is the type of content that really makes the internet a better more impactful place, and I appreciate yall time and effort that went into this.
Yeah if only the internet was just this and not content that's designed to make you hate other people.
As an addict myself, actively from age 16 to 35, now being 40; this is by far the most accurate, best told, informational documentary on drug smuggling I have ever seen. I can say first hand that the meth, cocain, and heroin stories are as truthful as they come. It is wild to watch today vs. the years of my most active addictions. A HUGE thank you to all of those who took the time and had the courage to make this film. You have no idea how truly inspirational you will be. I pray this video reaches 10 million or more.
Big hug lad
Addict here too friend. Oxy got me a good 13 years ago. the 80's up the schnoz made me feel literally like Jesus. I couldn't believe that there was something that made me happier than coke - but high octane Oxy was it. I've been on methadone now for nearly 13 or 14 years....at 49 I figure it'll be with me forever. Methadone felt AMAZING at first!!! Then it just became like all other opiates - just use it to maintain being well. I also take Temazepam (up the schnoz too) and I love it! A Temazepam coupled with a 109 mg dose of methadone turns a mundane day into a lovely one.
@@wangson
Why aren’t you getting off of Methadone? That sounds ridiculous to stay on it for as long as you have, much less say you plan to stay on it permanently for the rest of your life!
@@georgewashington2930 I can appreciate that point of view. Sadly, it's one of the few things in my day that I genuinely look forward to.
@@wangsonhave you considered psychedelics?
it's fascinating to me that all of the former dealers said that to actually help addicts and stop people getting into drugs what needs to happen is legalizing drugs and doing harm reduction rather than harsher prison sentences and more severe punishments. plus the description of the business side of things and how police activity affects the market and work... it really shows how the war on drugs gave the drug industry so much power.
It's a can of worms. Also, Iran contra.
But maybe it's better to just say no, who knows?
Of course the dealers want to legalize drugs. In reality they're lying or forgetting why they were criminalized in the first place. In an ideal world everything would be legalized but some people can't handle themselves and legalization has always been shown to greatly increase usage. Eventually people will whine and moan there would be such an an uproar drugs would have to be restricted again and we'd be back to square one. As for 'winning' the drug war thats such a non sequitur. Nobody/few people on the other side claims they will win the war on drugs. Its an ongoing process. Its like saying oh we'll never win the war against murder. Might as well legalize it.
It works in one country but it doesn't work in some places. Like Oregon legalizing the drugs but it became more of a problem than a solution
@@MrMikeDao Oregon forgot about the harm reduction part of it. But they did provide a nice object lesson in that it isn't as simple as just "legalize it", there have to be some other social systems in place to keep from just creating yet another disaster.
The drug war is just flat out evil.
The third guy: we used to hide the cocaine in tents.
The ad that pops up on my youtube right then: are you looking for a new tent?
Secretly asking you to start a drug empire
🤣🤣🤣
they all one of a kind
get to it whiteboy rick! 😂😂😂
Our phones are listening to us!
The third guy was smuggling cocaine around the world but got ptsd from prison in Ecuador, that prison must be mean crazy
The manner of the former undercover guy at the end makes me think he does too.
Look up the 2021-2022 prison riots in Ecuadorian prisons, idk how he survived, I have a friend locked up over there and I haven't heard of him in asome time 😢
ecuador's prisons are some of the most ruthless plots of land/buildings on the planet. it's not even anything to joke about it's really that bad. pure chaos a lot of the time. like the previous dude said, look up the riots from during COVID - they're absolutely insane.
There is a long video about Posh Pete. Very worth watching
Just go online to a gore site an see videos of Ecuador prisons .......murders.....rapes .decapitations shits crazy how he survived as a foreigner is beyond me
The first guy is absolutely bang on about addiction. The idea of abstinence is absurd. You do NOT have to be ready to quit forever to start moving forward and getting to a place where you do want to quit. When you're in active addiction, thats your life. When you quit, you try to abstain forever, you sit facing your empty life with the weight on your shoulders and then the relapse comes, with shame and self hatred by the bucket load.
We need to be encouraging and showing people how they can start building lives first, before they even think about the quitting process. We need to be giving people lives that they *want* to live, not throwing them sober and sore back into the life they run from.
How do people start building their lives when they are addicted to drugs?
@@FIshfood500 Current models of therapy don't actually exist right now to be able to accurately tell you officially how it would be done. These are my own ideas, from my life, research, and experiences.
Imo we should be giving therapy first, while the person is using, same for support groups, same for Occupational therapy, classes, any sort of skill building activity. We should be giving financial skill classes, we should be helping people understand themselves, all of this long before we even think about quitting.
Once a person has seen another side to life, that isn't all pain, sadness, trauma, once we teach them a few new skills, maybe help them get into routines where they are able to just for a second, see, that life *can* be alright, there's a far higher chance that they'll actually want to stay sober once they do physically quit.
No one becomes an addict for no reason, and we have a plethora of subtypes of addicted person, from high functioning to people who live on the streets. What they share in common is how they cope with pain. If we can somehow start to soothe that pain, before we drag a person off a substance+throw them into cold hard reality, I feel they'd have a better chance.
Before I got sober, I started making different decisions about my life. I picked up some old hobbies, started painting some stuff, started writing a lot. Doing those things then gave me this outlet for everything I've ever felt, all the things I used substances to numb. Even on substances, engaging in that expression led to huge positives for me and Ik others who have experienced the same things. After a while of building this little bit of happiness, I felt less and less like I *needed* substances. I've never went to rehab, never done official 12 steps, I just studied psych for a long time and thus studied a lot of models involving addiction. For me the current models focus far too much on addiction as if addiction is the root of the issue. When in reality addiction is actually the secondary behaviour that a person uses to cope with a root cause, whatever that may be. For some it's trauma, pain, overwhelm, self hatred, depression, for some it's due to neurodivergency, and a need to feel control and not feel so overwhelmed, truly there are a plethora of reasons *why* someone ends up addicted to something or things, and we need to be focusing more on that. The addicted persons whole life, rather than just that addictive behaviour.
@@FIshfood500exactly , they can’t answer that because all your money gets justified in going back to drug use , if it was easy to live normal lives while getting high like you want to as an addict everyone would do it
Well said, friend. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@@JoeRogansForehead I had typed out a reply proposing my own model of treatment regarding addiction but it's not here. I'm going to type one out now, and reply to the fellow who asked!
Ps, I have no interest in money, the last thing I want is to let the system use vulnerable people to make dirty money. I'm aware of the American rehab system and it's vast flaws, but I'm from the U.K, former psychology student and substance abuser. I have no benefit here, I have no personal gain, I literally just make observations and make proposals for change BC I want to.
Thanks for the tutorials!
If you think this is a tutorial😂💯 Let it go and leave it alone Amigo😅😅💯‼️
💀
So far, 147 people who liked this comment are getting monitored by the feds now 😂😂
Your welcome mate, aren’t you? 😮
😂😂😂
As someone who has no street smarts, and has never done drugs, the second guy is fascinating to me. A whole other world.
I've lived a similar life to these men and it's still fascinating to me too
David McMillan is legit. One of the only people to escape from Bangkok Hilton prison. He has done many interviews with Shaun Atwood. Extremely interesting man.
Stay ignorant and stay away from street drugs. If it's not prescribed by a doctor and picked at a pharmacy or Pot grown by someone you know and trust always assume it has Fentanyl in it.
Even the Pot from these sticker shops here in Upstate NY has tested positive for Fentanyl.
I know personally someone who lost their husband to an OD from smoking a joint from an Ounce of Pot bought at a retail location.
He definitely killed his wife bro
31:54 what is he talking about when he says “legal heroin?!?”
after all that work and taking down an entire crew of over 90 people the undercover cop is told that ' we have crushed the drug trade for at least 2 hours "......sums it all up ....the war on drugs is futile
Singapore seems to have solved it.
especially when you consider our military has a massive role in the protection of poppy fields and smuggling operations
@@DerMaus Singapore, being a small country, has never had a problem on the scale "the war on drugs" refers to. Additionally, it still arrests a sizeable amount of people each year for using hard drugs. Far more than for weed, too
@@terralexj9468 sure but we heard it in the video directly. The traffickers don't want to mess with places that have harsh sentences. We can't replicate their full success but if you clamp down hard enough you can deter much of it.
@@DerMaus Singapore has changed a lot over the years, they have strict laws and enforce them. They cannot maintain their reputation and income status if it is allowed.
First guy really made me tear up. Recently cleaned up and got out of the life… and I’ve been so scared to find a new passion in life. But I really think I’m ready. Thank you dude. Getting a copy of your book right now.
It's incredibly impactful to see the undercover cop's deep regret in realising that his incredible achievement and sacrifice had amounted to virtually nothing.
More accurately, less than nothing. His actions helped a different faction gain power by removing their competition.
Plus, destroyed countless lives, removed parents and breadwinners from families, ruined childhoods, and padded the pockets of politicians and the Prison Industrial Complex.
Read his (Neil Woods) books - fascinating insights
That will always be the case. Some things can be kept off the streets to some degree, others are simply too popular. If a certain percentage of a population don't want to abide by prohibition, there is virtually nothing that can be done. No-matter how many is put in prison, there will always be someone willing to take over. Prohibition is doomed to fail. It just creates revenue streams for organized crime. The harder it is pushed, the more brutal the type of gangster that will step up. But there will always be someone.
All the money that we spend on law enforcement interdiction efforts and crop eradication.. mostly could've went to fund treatment for those who want it. And all the money spent on drugs, could've been taxed and went to schools and infrastructure.
With the first guy, I have a friend who was arrested with a trunk full of cocaine. He turned his life around after prison and just became a licensed social worker last week. So proud of that guy!
If you haven’t already, Make sure you tell your friend you’re proud ❤❤
How long was he in prison for?
What does that have to do with the first guy?
Did you not watch his story? @StopItGarrison
In the US? Usually its a life sentence
"The smaller guys have been forced out of the market by these mafias who hold a monopoly." The little guy is just getting fucked over everywhere.
Yeah, even illegal markets are still markets and function just the same as one.
That's why the law of the jungle/ "free" market sucks. Markets need to be regulated to make sure the little guy has a fair chance
@@peggedyourdad9560I don't think they get to unionize though
@captainzork6109 The last thing anyone should want is government intervention. It’s bad for business and for freedom.
@@peggedyourdad9560especially in small markets the little guy is fucked.
A monopoly is an inherent bad thing. That's why you have anti trust laws. But every company dreams of being the monopoly.
So you can expect it to be a worse problem in an illegal unregulated market.
As an ex heroin addict, everything the second guy said is 100% true- including the fact that most overdoses attributed to heroin occur when alcohol and benzos are on board, not heroin alone.
I was thinking more along the lines of when people do speedballs by mixing uppers with depressants, ala River Phoenix.
@@georgewashington2930speedball thing is really an 80s myth. What would kill you is the downer which you take more of because you can't feel it as much due to the upper
@Dismem I over dosed on a speed ball 6 months ago in Chicago. Its not a myth. When the coke wears off people OD, people do more dope to come down from the coke. When I OD'd I put .1 of good powder a $10 bag of H or whatever it is these days. From west side chicago. I snorted all of it at once, I felt amazing. When the coke wore off I overdosed on the green line train. Woke up at the hospital and still had 6 bags of dope in my pocket. I then woke up in some pissed of guys yard like 6 miles away in Humboldt park.. ive got 3 and a half months clean now.
@@Atrainswrld
I hope you stay clean. Just remember when you have urges to go back to the mindset of getting through that minute, and then that hour, and then that day at a time. Urges will come during stressful periods in life, so it’s really important to remember that “this feeling will soon pass.”
@@Atrainswrld exactly you Od'd.. The speedball myth was "uppers and downers send your heart faster and slower at the same time causing death.. Totally wrong.
The best description I've heard on the behavior of addiction is-
"It waits."
I think you're getting confused with the behavior of the bus stop user.
omg so profound !!! 😑
Why?
@@RebornLegacy because it waits until something happens in your life, where you may get tempted and go back to using...... it is very common for people to be clean for 10-20 years, and then something tragic happens in their life, for example a brother, sister, mother or father passing, and they go back to using drugs.....
there is also a good saying that goes "you are never an EX drug addict" "you are just a drug addict that does not use drugs any more"
What the world can't seem to wrap their head around is that some people require drugs for their entire lives, and full grown adults don't need to be told what drugs they require nor what their doses need to be, especially full grown adults who have been doing drugs their entire lives.
Some of us are just never going to stop and you can't make us and you shouldn't try. Not all of us are drug addicts either, some of us have genetic conditions that make it so we are dependent on drugs and dependency is different than addiction.
People say that UA-cam is a pointless cesspit, but these How To tutorials could be a godsend for impoverished but ambitious people trying to get into the industry. Nicely done.
😂😂😂
Yippeee!
Amen 😇🙏
Lmao
Right!? 😂 It’s like watching “I Almost Got Away With It”. Or any similar crime show.
This is bloody good. Like all the comments mention, “thought it’d be something I’d come back too over multiple sittings”, “clicked on it from sheer curiosity not thinking I’d stay” etc. but it is so interesting you’re forced to see it through. Encapsulates your focus easily and you’re stuck wanting more from each individual even though everything is eloquently and thoroughly explained. Wow this was heckin awesome
As someone who suffers with extreme severe anxiety I can totally relate to her. I would stop eating for days at a time as a punishment. I worry a lot about my life, everyone around me and pleasing everyone. It's absolutely crippling, so glad she got the help she needed, lovely young lady it's so sad that society has 1 in 3 people suffering mental health issues. I hope everyone seeks help
People need to realise that people with anxiety disorders have oversensitised nerves, it's not a simple case of manning up and getting over it.
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about how mushrooms and psychedelics treats anxiety, but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
Yes, doctor Greg mushroom I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
Please, how do I reach doctor Greg?
Is he on the internet?
13:45, ... I am a recovering addict with a grateful18 yrs. clean from heroin, ... What this man is saying with this statement is bang on the money. We will NEVER win a war on drugs, ... NEVER!! You have to stop or at the least minimize demand for the drugs in the first place. People use drugs because they want to feel differently than they do now. And most of the depression in our society comes from not having enough money to pay our bills. 50 percent of North American's can't afford a $500.00 emergency. Start paying people a living wage and you will see the biggest change for the good in 3-4 generations.
That's the system working as designed sadly
We lost the war on drugs back when Pablo was around.
WE WILL ABSOLUTELY WIN!
wow that's a dumb comment. "start paying a living wage" You have absolutely no clue.
enlighten us@@LoneWolfSnowplowing
going into another country cause the price of corruption is lower is such a good description of how the world works
It's also the American business model.
UA-cam recommended this to me, and my God is it better than any Netflix documentary I’ve watched!
Agree😊
I can see the addiction to the life as well as the drugs. The money and that powerful feeling that you have people and resources at your fingertips must feel amazing at times. But you also know how dangerous it is, and often want to leave because you know it wont last forever. Theres no “happily ever after” or easy retirement for someone who deals. Very scary. Very informative.
OMG! I’ve had an education today. I thought at almost 71 I was aware. Governments who keep people trapped in poverty and on low earnings must accept some responsibility for this. When people are desperate to get out of poverty they become easy targets for drug gangs. I can’t see an end to this trade. It’s an easy yet dangerous way to make money.
Yes and no….I don’t think you can ever say poverty is an excuse for crime, especially when it is “first world poverty” where the poor are more likely to be overweight and they have a room, a bath, just not in a nicer neighborhood etc….compared to third world poverty, where people starve or live in trash or mud shanties with no indoor plumbing, etc.
And at least on the US or other first-world democracies, you can almost live for free. FB marketplace is packed with nice items, and many buy something, set the box aside so it stays nice, use the item, then pass it along for free when done….I do this every week. Thrift stores and garages sales are packed with great clothes (have to search thru a lot, but they are there) for pennies on the dollars, and many live in vans with a gym member for a year, then an apartment a year, to save up money….it’s not bad in your 20-30s. And ways to save on food, etc. without going to extremes.
And colleges and med schools have scholarships just waiting for good kids from a poor background. It is not easy, but there are way more options than “well….guess I need to deal drugs” if poor. My grand parents were dirt poor farmers and coal miners, but they saw that their kids got a good middle class career, and then they helped their kids go to med school, etc.
big yikes. telling on yourself.@@Itried20takennames
@@Itried20takennamesI’m just not gonna read it (your comment). HAHAHAHAHHAHAHHA HAHAHAHAHAHAH
You are not 71
@@Itried20takennames If you have never experienced the pain of hunger and abject poverty. Then it’s is very easy to judge. Life on benefits is not as great as some imagine. I am disgusted in this day and age that this entitled government would punish those down on their luck by imposing sanctions on them. This is the cruelest system ever implemented and has pushed many to suicide.Forcing mothers out to work is another thing I am against. Children need the security of someone being there for them when they come home from school.
I could listen to the heroin guy talk about anything for hours.
His voice reminds me of old school ABC broadcasters here in Aus! Very smooth... Yet unnerving!
Reminds me of Borroughs and the idea of the gentleman addict.
Absolutely loved listening to him. His flow, diction, tone.... fantastic
He was actually on the mdma guys podcast. There's hours of the two talking, and yeah heroin guy is captivating. Pretty sure they ended up doing several episodes, the guy just had that many stories to tell and was so good at telling them.
He seems like he comes from a well to do family background, and was well educated. A little against the stereotype,
The first dude was such an incredible speaker! Very educated & empathetic. I really took a lot from it all, ty for speaking out about it! Stay strong & keep fighting/speaking! I'd love to see him speak!
Excellent video. I'm 9 years clean now and this is something more people need to watch.
The ecology makes perfect sense. When the cop explains that eliminating any given gang increases the monopoly and power of the rival gangs, it’s “natural selection” - the “fittest” gangs survive and dominate. So in a way, policing eliminates the weaker gangs.
It’s like germs and antibiotics lowkey
Its also the Nature of a Market i.e. the "natural" Law of Centralisation made more extreme by outside Pressure.
@@adampolzin8061 savage thing to think about
The older guy is extremely wise, blunt, and speaks in a matter of fact way that’s enjoyable. Dude just knows what he’s talking about and it’s clear he has so much experience. Unfortunately I know the opiate/opioid life too well.
David McMillan is such a triple OG in the smack game bro that he said he used to hide it in the "wooden surrounds of radio amplifiers" lol. I haven't heard that term since I was a child in early 90's lol. Also, I too suffer from opiate use disorder.
@@Naughtforeye lol ya that’s pretty old school. Sorry to hear that man, keep fighting the good fight. Stay alive, that’s the #1 thing. Especially these days with all of the nasty sht going around.
@@Naughtforeye Same here, luckily I have a doc who happily keeps me on oxy so don't need to go street.
He's also a psychopath lol.
Today he's a gently old man.
Remember, at least two people have died due to his actions, that we know of.
His participation in the heroine trade has ruined countless lives.
He belongs in the Bangkok Hilton.
He's earned his stay, but runs free like dealer #1.
There's something wrong with this picture.
Mr McMillan served ten years in Pentridge - six months for the importation of heroin, and 9 1/2 years for that short collar and cardigan combo at 28:19 .
These stories are (and this is a bad word for it), intoxicating. Thank you.
Wonder if he met old uncle Chop Chop?
McMillan escaped from a Thailand prison. That story was crazy .
You're Funny
I was there too
@@mattd6593 _Just another bare bum in the shower_
First class doco. A punchy edit of clever insiders covering all the important stuff. This is too good to be buried on UA-cam ❤
This is the kind of dealer interview the world needs. Dude concisely describes all issues that have evolved from the American war on drugs. What an intelligent man
Exactly we ruined an entire generation of mostly guys due to the war on drugs. We all know someone suffering from addiction. They deserve a chance at life
The problems with seizures, when law enforcement makes a big bust, it just drives the price up, making it more profitable.
YEP, war on drugs is all about $$, gov LOVES taking all the cash and resources the drug dealers have. Its a massive source of funding for black projects. Friends DEA, has been for 12 years. He says men in suits hit up their evidence rooms, take all the cash and any valuables they feel like.
And usually the ones lobbying for more restrictions are the ones with the best product to sell
Hey, higher risk means higher price, but it's not a "risk" for them since they have the cops in their pockets.
Anyone who's shilling for more severe drug laws is suspect.
Eh, not really. The drug cartels are smart enough to know that a percentage of their supply is going to be seized and they price accordingly.
Nah, drop of water in the ocean :p
Not really, it's less volume being sold to the end users. Whether the profit remains the same depends on how much the price goes up and how much the volume goes down.
I really like David McMillan. He's softly spoken and really knows what he's talking about. He's intelligent, worldly. Not the usual drug dealer we get shown via a documentary.
Is he the guy who escaped from Bang Kwang? That is the “Bangkok Hilton”, the prison in Bangkok, Thailand. He is from Australia, and actually the only (foreigner)to ever escape from there. Yes, very intelligent guy, but also very arrogant, according to his former prison friends. In any case, it would be interesting to spend an evening with this guy 😮
@@scandicdream yes. He's that dude.
Clearly a sociopath.
@@scandicdream
Wait didn't a diplomats daughter escape from the woman's section of the Bangkok Hilton aswell ? ( escape I mean pay her way out )
One thing I learnt living in South East Asia is always pay the first policeman that catches you with anything ! As the further up you go the more expensive it gets
So if you can't afford the Bribe start calling anyone who can
Never involve your home country's diplomats as this will take money off the table 😢
@@NameName-do9hj I don’t know about that. You are talking about “Lard Yao”, the woman’s prison. I have not heard of that. Yes, you are correct, ALWAYS pay as quickly as you can, not only does it get more expensive, eventually it could get to late…I.e. if you have come all the way to the local jail, and your info is taken down officially, you are basically frugged….. I know this because I have lived in south east Asia half my life…but, so, yes you 100% correct, my friend
This is quality. Not glorifying, just straight up informative.
During my teenage years and early twenties, the part about having hundreds of thousands of drugs in your closet really resonated with me. That period of my life feels close, but now I'm clean and no longer involved in drug dealing. Fast money, also known as easy money, disappears as quickly as it comes, but now I value hard-earned money and strive to hold onto it. It's been two years since I've been clean, and my drug of choice was opiates. I'm grateful that phase of my life is behind me, although every day is still a struggle. I owe thanks to my wife of 10 years and my mother for their unwavering support. Seriously, kids, steer clear of hard drugs - it's no joke.
Good luck 🍀 everyone 🇨🇦
Come on, man...really?
'hundreds of thousands of drugs in your closet' resonated with you? Do you expect people browsing UA-cam comments to believe you were some sort of kingpin with a huge stockpile of drugs/money?
It's not at all out of the realm of possibility that you had an opiod addiction and found a way to recovery, but dude....
@@AclockworkPurpleget lost
@@AclockworkPurple The literal $ value of the closet drugs is the least important part of this account. It's irrelevant to the point.
@@m.streicher8286 Tell that to the guy I responded to, not me.
He's the one that felt it necessary to include that in his comment.
Hilarious.
@@m.streicher8286 Tell that to the guy I replied to.
He's the one that felt obligated to include 'having hundreds of thousands of drugs in your closet' "resonating" with him and then proceeded to comment about he's no longer involved in "drug dealing".
The 1st guy was very inspiring. The 2nd guy is f**king legendary😎
Inspiring? What has he inspired you to do? 😱
@@TayWoodeprobably to do something good with his life like go to school or not sell meth lol
It's not inspiring dealing drugs.
@@LordOfSwedenHe was speaking about how the first guy turned his life around and began speaking about the drug crisis here in America
Meanwhile the most legendary, interesting and intelligent people in the world are being oppressed by the likes of UA-cam so you don't ever get to discover them and of course, same thing for the mainstream media.
Good job blurring out the drugs. Seeing white powder definitely would have harmed me, and I'm so happy and grateful that you protected me from that fate.
i think they were more worried about a community guidelines strike and having the video taken down
It’s not for you, my brother in Christ. It’s because of UA-cam. Good joke though.
It's possible that the news footage they sourced for the clip was already censored. It may not have been Insider that did it at all.
Well, clearly you were harmed in the ego by a news outlet tiptoeing around AI censorship robots.
@@gubbothehuggo2771youtube algorithm demonetizes videos that show drugs. That's why they blurred it.
First dude is truly the goat, and his acknowledgement of the privilege he was afforded through his perceived identity was both extremely touching and very intellectually sound in a way we dont see much anymore on youtube
2nd guy is a James bond villain confirmed
awh jesus christ that video starting off with "hello im doctor.... i sold hundreds of pounds of meth" had me in stitches laughing
he meant weught.....dud i spell that weorngly?
@Skritza
Not much different than the doctors prescribing 1000s pounds of amphetamines today. Funny how one is completely acceptable but the other so stigmatized.
It helps being a licensed professional@@timothyboone5003
Why?
@@sethkamens6085 jew
I live in Philadelphia which is the epicenter of the opioid epidemic in the US and I can tell you that they go after the users not the dealers or the suppliers. They're going after the wrong people. They're vilifying the homeless that are victims of the drug epidemic
Interesting how everyone, including the cop, said that war on drugs is pointless
The government makes money off ever step of drug use
The best, most complete, and profound look at drugs, its effects, and sensible recommendations on how to really deal with the issue effectively.
To understand the U.S. war on drugs. You must first understand that it has been an outstanding success, greater than anything ever imagined. For those who stand to profit from it. It’s not about eliminating illegal drugs or their use. It’s about the money that can be made.
That's probably the main source of funding for every covert operation...
@@TheKetsalol, it props up the whole us economy, same as the military industrial complex
@user-bm8ls6vt1v
I’ve often said the U.S. economy could not withstand stopping illegal drug use. If all illegal drugs vanished tomorrow it would set the economy into so much chaos and crash the economy like never before seen.
If I had been arrested 12 times I'd seriously reconsider if the job was for me.
My cousin is a recovering addict, and he blew up a house in Groveland at one point. So glad he is more stable now and in a better place.
Addiction is such an issue and many often have co-existing mental health issues. Unless we resolve that we don't resolve the problem. A lot of forms of addiction in my life. We even joke about those who shop too much or whatever, it is the same problem different form. This was very good.
Yup. I loved downers. Realized my mind would move at a 1000 miles and hour and everything I did was done as efficient and quick as possible. Like in school I was A+ student, was in AP and honors all throughout high school got a 32 on my ACT, full ride scholarship and finished my degree in business in 3 years instead of 4. Soon as I was out of school I hit a rut. Had time. Too much time to myself and had broken a leg gotten Oxys and instantly knew this was what I was missing in my life. 3 years later I’m doing fentanyl and just now finding out I’ve terrible anxiety. 2 years clean now! 24 years old and running my families trucking school business now. Super thankful for my meds fr. Without my Zoloft I don’t think I could function truly without having some type of downer slowing my mind.
Keep it up!! 👍
its a disease of the american mindset, it crops in every single unique walk of life u can
Finally, a guide for my future business
> loli pfp
You already made it very clear what you are going to traffic.
but officer it's just a drawing i swear
@@General-GrievousI traffic a drug and I only sell it to the ladies.
It's called this D!!!! 😂
I wish 😔
@@General-Grievousbut she’s actually a 5000 year old dragon spirit! Not a 9 year old girl like she looks!
😂😂😂
I could have listened to Mr Heroin for hours. He’s like a young Anthony Hopkins.
Lamb lover
Really fascinating. These guys are all smart and articulate. They make it clear that the war on drugs is not only futile but also makes everything worse.
I really want to watch this, but the heroin part is truly testing my sobriety. 147 days. I’ll come back to this in a year or so.
Self awareness is so important
Keep it up! Very proud of you for knowing how to stay away. Thats a great sign.
Thanks, guys. Staying strong! All the best.
Very proud of you and that's very normal. Good for you for knowing when you feel triggered and stay strong. I used heroin, every opiate and crack. It's been years and I still find myself remembering and craving that feeling.. just once more. It goes away now though. I don't have to play it all the way through. Keep going!
Smart choice.
Every one of them charming and engaging. This is one of the most fascinating videos I've seen on YT for a long time.
Today he's a gently old man.
Remember, at least two people have died due to his actions, that we know of.
His participation in the heroine trade has ruined countless lives.
He belongs in the Bangkok Hilton.
He's earned his stay, but runs free like dealer #1.
There's something wrong with this picture.
@@kennhirschwho died?
It’s hard to imagine such a kindhearted, well-spoken man being a big time drug runner.
Kindhearted people don’t deal drugs, only narcissists and opportunists. Your attributing a virtue to a man that has none
@@fallujah0351 My pot dealer back in the day was actually one of the nicest people I knew 🤷 Even so, it seems the guy in this is reformed and back on the straight and narrow
@@neireannach I should’ve specified “hard” drugs. I know plenty of awesome hippies that sell weed, that’s a different beast
@@fallujah0351 haha fair enough
I love Adi's story. He is now a prolific scholar and has graduate degrees from the University of California..
Yeah but he's a woke liberal. He's probably a Biden voter.
Adi Jaffe seems so incredibly smart and we'll-spoken, no wonder he got a PhD. Incredible documentary, thanks
He has some interesting point, although the second interviewee understands drugs and war on them better. Legalization of all drugs with certain oversight he suggested is probably the best solution, if law enforcement wasn't involved in drug trafficking in some ways like making jobs to fight what will never be defeated this way.
Somehow with a name like that, judges still see him as a “white male”. What a crock . Talking about privilege… it’s obvious he’s middle eastern
Yep, that's why you should be wary of anyone advocating for "harder drug laws" because it serves the supplier, not them.
They can jack up the prices, thus increasing the desperation of the user and causing MORE crime. @@Chungalhunga
well spoken
we'll = we will
I wonder how well spoken the addicts with ruined lives that he sold products to speak today.
Wake up, he’s a scum bag
The heroin guy sounded like he was doing a Nature special 🤣
I didn't expect to sit and watch all that but it was spellbinding and fascinating, thank you for your stories
I used to tell my kids stay away from anything addictive, period. That was not enough for my youngest one. She had the most going for her, and she lost it all. Sad.
Sorry to hear, hope your daughter comes back.
The only way to tackle inherent addiction from a young age is understand which exact reasons one has to feel the need to numb themselves. Everybody is an addict for something (dopamine, sugar), but real addicts lean towards substances that take them away from the present moment. Also, it's never too late to bring them back so don't give up
It really is true that the “not even once” attitude is the only way for hard drugs. Once you’ve tried it, the feeling sticks in your mind forever and it takes a very strong will to stay away. When you can snort motivation and inject pure peaceful bliss, it’s very hard to tell yourself that those things are evil.
I think my father had an excellent approach, he told me that if I was gonna do drugs do drugs but understand that they have these effects and make sure you always have someone safe around incase something goes wrong. And he wouldn't judge me if I did end up there. I never ended up trying g hard drugs despite having easy access and curiosity.
Why is it that the people who have the most potential are also the most likely to get pulled into a vortex of death and despair? I am sorry for your loss. I had a friend who lost his aunt recently. His aunt had an incredible essence, star quality and so so loved by her family. The word that comes to my mind is Super Nova…💥
Brilliant!
And the proof is, I was going to add it to "Watch later", however the moment I started the video I couldn't stop, Superb!
More like this please.
The first dude is speaking a high level of truth. There's more powerful truths than others and very rarely you hear it at this level which almost exclusively involves first hand experience. People should pay close attention.
I respect the fact that this documentary shows the truth. Of when these men looked back, they realized nobody wins when it comes to drugs
Psychedelics saved me from years of uncontrollable depression, anxiety, smoking, and illicit pills addiction. Imagine carving heavy chains for over a decade and then all of a sudden that burden is gone. Believe it or not, in a couple of years they'll be all over for treatment of mental health related issues.
Psilocybin is legal in some states and mushroom therapy is allowed in many states as a legitimate medical treatment. So I believe soon it'll be globally used as a treatment for anxiety, depression, and more.
To be honest, mushrooms are one of the most amazing things on the planet and it is natural, they serve in many ways not only for mental related issues.
Can you help me with a reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. It is very hard to get a reliable source here in New Zealand. Really need!
Yes, Sporeville. I had the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and addiction... Mushrooms definitely made a huge difference to why I'm clean today.
I wish they were readily available in my place.
Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He's 59 & has many mental health issues plus probably CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone.
He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD knows if it is common for an obsession with violence.
This is so incredibly interesting, and it’s nice to see honest interviews with people that have turned their lives around. I can’t stand the film reel noises omg 😅
Extremely well done. Absolutely worth staying up until 4 AM to watch. Looking very forward to becoming acquainted with each of these men’s important work. 😅
It’s so weird how no one really regrets taking or ruining another persons life
My mom used to blame others for my sister's addiction. My sister laughed at her.
You know nothing and have the mind of a baby
I was raised in a meth lab/trailer. Honestly, I have lots of internal problems due to the chemicals. I've never consumed a drug. I was just unfortunate in my upbringing, and I suffer from those consequences.
Pray the Lord will help u!
If the Lord didn't help when they were a baby or a toddler or a small child or an older child or a teenager why the feck should anybody care what the Lord thinks now?
@vetinaris1297 I don't care what anyone thinks. It was a prayer. Of course, there needs to be action. Laws changed, the public educated, more help for victims.
I’m sorry that happened to you. If we’re to believe people’s opinions of the first speaker and how he’s inspiring and not just a scumbag meth-dealer, maybe Adi can help with some of his ill-gotten gains that he never had to do any true penance for now that he’s a “doctor”
23:35 "lubrication of the border" now that is a proper euphemism
David McMillan is back!!! Brilliant as always sir. My favorite story teller on the planet.
This was brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. 3 criminals and a cop all shouting that legalisation is the only way. Well done everyone. Bravo
this just makes me remember my time in high school and makes me remember why i stopped. thank you insider.
just over 20mims. gone..the best insight documentary i have ever seen into the world of class A' drugs. such honesty by those involved.
“Because I’ve been around Cocaine so much that without even taking it, I can rub it between my fingers, look at the colour, *smell it,* and I can tell you pretty much which country it’s from”…
🤣🤣🤣
Yeah. What hes talking being “good” would be almost silky looking and have yellow swirls of ammonia in it. Very wild taste the ether. Or so ive heard
@@KarstRatsThe cocaine we used in the 80s was out of this world. I don’t regret using it at all-it’s almost a privilege, in hindsight-except it helped desensitize me to other drugs.
How can we put this very specific skill on a resume? 😂
A Cocaine Sommelier.
Things drug addicts say... only an idiot would believe.
First speaker is a total success story!
Can you do one on human trafficking?
Ask Vince McMahon.
Ask Matt Gaetz.
If only Epstein hadn’t “hung” himself
@@gone.golfingoh god i have to find out what you mean .
@@bigickmonster Make sure you have a strong stomach. Some of it involves poop.
Becoming an adult (21) my eye has been opened up to how many people do drugs, mainly cocaine. Most adults/late teens, I’ve met have done coke at least once which has made me so interested in the world of dealing and just wanting to understand why it’s so easy to get. This was so fascinating to watch
This is amazing, it reminds of a Vice piece. Well done! I lost my best friend to hard drugs a couple years ago, I never got into that world me and him would just smoke weed and he'd come over messed up on H or whatever he felt like doing at that period of time decades ago. Really miss playing games with him and it sucks that he died so someone with a fat wad of cash could have a fatter wad of cash and it's devastated his family.
It's a sad story that many other Americans have been through which is a huge concern. No stigma against anyone struggling with any of this stuff, just try to be safe and quit if you can cause I'm sure there are people who care about you.
Most people don't need to quit because their use of whatever they enjoy isn't excessive.
yea if it doesnt destroy your life or whatever go for it@@loganmedia1142
Enjoyed this documentary no dull moment 🙏🏽
First guy snitched no way you're getting 1 year on those charges lol
they all snitched obviously. Besides the cop
When you’re dealing with state or federal charges. Everyone facing fed time or is doing fed time are snitches🤷♂️
he also explained his unique situation like pay attention
@@jtcmk believe what you want about his "unique situation" but bottom line is he definitely grassed on a lot of people.
One of the best UA-cam videos I have ever watched
Very interesting but as someone who has & is still an active heroin addict it really hurts deep down in my soul. From 17 to 55 and still struggling, that’s my whole life so I should probably not be put in the same room with this guy especially since I’m from the very place in Australia he was talking about. Peace and health to everyone still suffering ❤
Smackhead,stop being weak and get off it.
Please use 0.22ug micron wheel filters and look up volumetric dosing on psychonaut wiki. It will literally keep you alive. I'm 5+ years "sober" now, but the goal should be to minimize physical harm and reduce the chance of overdose to nearly 0.
He didn't make it and if it wasn't him smuggling it'll be someone else and there are loads. They don't force it in the people who take it. I'm struggling but from prescription, it's just as bad.
prob shouldnt be putting this info out
@@kayleighkyme4666 +1, except I dropped the stigma completely. No need to worry as life is too short, I have chronic pain, I have oxy, yeah I take it, have been for well over 5 years. Can't really stop as I've had 6 surgeries and have tried every "alternative" under the sun, they just decided to keep me on oxy, wasn't lack of trying from my side, but sometimes, you move on, no matter what.
i came from an amazing child hood, spoiled only child. was unmotivated and didn’t go to college then met the wrong person and boom i was on ice. my struggle was two years heavy use but i’m 24 now and have a corporate job living the dream 2 years sober. i promise the only person who can help you is yourself. i’ve had bumps in the road but keep trying and trying
Why?
Good job!
You forgot the part about prescribed drugs!
Legalising drugs and using money from taxation of drugs to deal with issues makes a lot more sense than pretending that law enforcement has a chance at suppressing it.
legalize, but zero tax dollars for treatment, stupid choices have stupid prizes
@@DougRoles-t2u If society takes your approach, they'll win the stupidest prize of all - even more addicts with ZERO treatment options, instead of at least some, running around being agents of chaos that they already are today. No one wins in that scenario, no one.
You're free to be "holier-than-thou" and make moralistic judgements of people that are not in full possession of their faculties but addicts don't set out to take drugs thinking "oh, the government will foot the bill for my rehab so it's ok!". Any taxes from legalization would come from the addicts themselves and dealers - a net-new tax stream. If anything, ALL those taxes should be geared towards treatment because right now, the govt is diverting other tax money to fund treatment options.
Absolutists with "simple solutions" (like yours) to very complex problems are the reason why we have a "war" on drugs and why they are illegal to begin with. Most absolutists on this topic never experienced significant socioeconomic, psychological, circumstantial strife that could push someone to use drugs and yet, somehow, think they're the best authority on how manage the problem. They are ones standing at the podiums of our society, sermonizing everyone on the "right" solution without a shred of empathy. Even the COP in the video took the time to understand, with empathy, the real victims of the structure he was trying to infiltrate - the USER-dealer.
US wouldn't be able to help itself from using that revenue to instigate more wars.
Nobody ever said "Prohibition in the 20's was successful." Rather, Prohibition was the cause of the greatest crime wave in history.
Annual deaths from all illegal drug overdose in US is a little over 100,000 on average.
Annual deaths from cigarettes are about 500,000 on average.
The War on Drugs keeps prices higher in illicit drug markets.
The War on Drugs employs millions of law enforcement, lawyers, judges, counselors, etc.
The War on Drugs causes drug related violence driven by territorial control for profits.
We will NEVER NEVER NEVER make drugs legal. THERE'S TOO MUCH MONEY IN IT.
Drugs are entirely different. One can drink casually but one cannot use meth the same way.
@user-kc6iq3jd2i Wrong. Everything can be used recreationally, even heroin and opioids. Depends on the person.
Sad but true.
@@Anders-vl6kk Yeah ....those casual meth users are soooo in control of their habit.
@@sarahferguson-i8ha founding physician of Johns Hopkins was a morphine/opiate addict -William Stewart Halsted. He basically said IF YOU HAVE the means, you can be on opioids for life. And it’s true. If you never have to worry about running out, police, and take care of your health. You can. But that’s not really realistic 😂
this wise old man would be saving lives today in the fentanyl epidemic
I really appreciate that the first guy acknowledged his privilege in this situation because that was a sweetheart deal he got.
The way the first man recognized and acknowledged his privilege made me respect him so much more. Thanks for your story it was inspiring to know how you completely changed your life
Huh, he's privileged because hes a white male but he had a hard time getting a job after being incarcerated.... weird
started doing drugs since my teenage. Got addicted to heroin for over 16 years. Heroin addiction actually destroyed my life. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Not until my mom recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
Amen God bless people. Save your health save your mind. Life is better without heroin, cocaine, alcohol and cigarettes. And you have more money in your pocket. God bless everyone who has rejected the devils intentions to be addicted to alcohol and cigarettes etc which can cause so much damage to health.
Can you help me with the reliable source A. I'm 56 and have suffered for years with addiction, anxiety and severe ptsd, I got my panic attacks under control myself years ago and they have come back with a vengeance, I'm constantly trying to take full breaths but can't get the full satisfying breath out, it's absolutely crippling me, i live in France. I don't know much about these mushrooms. Really need a reliable source!! Can't wait to get them.@@SuvariBoorish-yh3rj
I'm really happy for you that your mom decided to help you...I hear about alot of family members or so called friends shutting an addict out of their life, which since most addicts do it to mask emotions to me is the worse thing someone can do to an addict.@@SuvariBoorish-yh3rj
@@BrieflyCarmel-vw1znI wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone. He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence. How can I get contact with him? Is he on insta??
@@FranklinDiverse-lm6mjYes he's Dr.jeffshroom. Shrooms to me is a natrual healer. I know a guy who has used mushrooms in the same way and they have really helped him. mah dudes have safe trips all.
The best documentary I've seen in years. Absolutely brutally honest👌
When he was describing mobile meth labs it was immediately interrupted by a Tesla ad and I nearly dropped my pipe from laughing
Psilocybin mushrooms healed me . I can't explain it but my experience has been spiritual and eye opening . I also started micro dosing . It really helped me get rid of depression and anxiety . 0:03
@@ThomasDaniel-kw4jedr.johnsonshroom is your guy. Best shrooms and psychedelics guy I know. 0:03
dr.johnsonshroom is the best . He's been my go to for anything psychedelics and shrooms . He's very good
Golden Teacher was one of my best experiences . Anxiety and depression are no more.
@@WilliamJames-ji5rk
Yes he's d.johnsonshroom 0:01
Can dr.johnsonshroom send to me in Canada 🇨🇦
no, this repeated sound effect is not annoying at all.
I must have been sheltered because the amount of people that not only partake in, but also traffic, drugs is astounding. This world is so broken.
I’m so glad I clicked on this video. It was recommended several times and I kept skipping it. Very captivating